Thursday 22 April 2010

Ashy Skies: When Holidays Never End - by Dea Birkett

I was listening to the radio today - while trying to find matching socks in the laundry basket - when a woman who was stranded in Spain due to ‘ash in air’ was interviewed. ‘I always said I hoped our holiday would never end. Now I’ve changed my mind,’ she said.

The most interesting aspect of the recent volcanic eruption in Iceland is how it’s exposed our attitudes towards going away. In theory, being stuck on a beach in Thailand or a hotel in Manhattan for a week longer than expected isn’t a hardship. But when it actually happens, it’s far from appealing. However much we might like to imagine we want to spend all our lives spread out on a sun lounger with no To Do list, that isn’t our dream life at all. For many holidaymakers, and particularly those with kids, each extra enforced day living the dream has felt like a nightmare.

The whole point about holidays is that they don’t last forever; they’re different from the everyday. However much a cosy hotel may advertise it’s a ‘home away from home’, we only want to stay there because it’s nothing like where we live. Even if we seek familiar food for our kids when we’re away, preferring to stay at accommodation that has a full English on the menu, we go there because at least the weather is different to our own back garden. We eat our fried eggs in the sun.

And however much we imagine we want to throw off all routine, we only want to do that for a fortnight. If holidaying became our ordinary life, we’d want to escape it. I sometimes long for the six-week summer school break to end and to return to the comfort of knowing we all have to go to bed and get up at a certain time. Regularity – and alarm clocks – are good for the soul.

So I’m going to appreciate our next family holiday a little more. I won’t spend the last few days wishing we could stay longer. I’ll just be glad for the break, and even gladder to be going home.

5 comments:

  1. I've been stuck in france due to ash and have met lots of other people bravely battling their way home - everybody seems to be enjoying the drama really.

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  2. I tend to think its a particularly english thing battling home against the odds - I think we do drama much better than we do normality and that we all greatly enjoy rising to the occasion.

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  3. food for thought as ever, dea, and you're right - an endless holiday would drive us batty.

    for my own take on the ash-cloud farrago and what lessons we can take from it , see my blog:
    www.rhondastravels.net/blog.php

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  4. Whilst we couldn't really complain at being stuck in Rome for a week, utterly beautiful as ever and with both the sun and azaeleas coming out for us on the Spanish steps that week, it did present a few practical problems - no landline or Internet access from our villa in the hills meant we had to find a hotel in the city where they were struggling to cope with guests who couldn't leave and unsure of who would arrive, and for the first time I did find myself wishing I'd booked a package holiday with all the security that brings and a friendly rep who could spend her day sorting out flights whilst I enjoyed the extra sun!

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  5. "Stuck in Rome" is right - there are times when it seems we would have been best to book a package holiday - or more technically one that is covered by an ATOL licence or is financially protected by a bond.But how do you know if what you book IS protected? Look on the brochure or website for an ATOL logo, or a logo such as TOPPS, or TTA, or if in doubt ask your holiday provider to show you ddetails of what protection you have. You then know if you will be looked after by your tour opeator. Mind you, what you are getting is the 'duty of care' that a tour operator must give you, by law. It does not mean they will pay for all expenses from when you are stuck til when you get home, but they may take some of the fiancial hit and will take all the hassle of sorting out away from you. Since much of this summer may be affected by 'the ash cloud', going away in the next few months is going to be like playing Russin roulette with your hard-earned money: If you book all the items of your holiday yourself you will save soome money; if you book a package with a tour operator it might cost you a little more but you know you will be looked after. Save money or buy peace fo mind - a straight choice really.

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